International chemical weapon troubleshooters will enter
war-torn Syria on Tuesday to start one of the biggest and most dangerous
disarmament operations ever staged.
With more than 1,000 tonnes of sarin, mustard gas and other banned
horror chemicals stocked across the country, the UN and the global chemical weapons watchdog have
launched an urgent appeal for scarce experts to join the mission.
Applicants must be ready to face mortal risks and an impossible
deadline.
UN leader Ban Ki-moon called the operation "daunting"
after the UN Security Council voted Friday to eliminate President Bashar
al-Assad's chemical arms.
UN needs 200 inspectors
The mission by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons (OPCW), which polices the 1993 Chemical
Weapons Convention will run in parallel to a UN investigation into a huge sarin
gas attack in Damascus in August and other suspected attacks.
Final details of a US-Russia plan to dispose of stockpiles at an
estimated 45 sites have still not been agreed, UN diplomats said.
Clean-ups of chemicals have been staged in Iraq and Libya, but never
in the middle of a raging war.
Experts say the OPCW will need up to 200 inspectors for the
Syria force. It has less than half that number who already have a heavy regular
workload.
The watchdog has had to appeal to the major powers to send
scientists.
Those who go will become a new target in the 30-month-old
conflict and the strife means the noxious potions will have to be moved out of
Syria to be destroyed.
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